Obama’s domestic energy-rationing agenda made the Paris climate treaty possible. Since the Obama agenda was not set in law, but merely implemented through regulation, the Trump administration can undo that agenda without going to Congress. And that is exactly what the Environmental Protection Agency under Administrator Scott Pruitt is doing. The several rules designed to reduce the use of fossil fuels and thereby raise energy prices are being undone using the same rule-making process by which they were done.

The effects of Trump’s energy deregulatory agenda are likely to be huge. Lower energy prices will obviously benefit consumers. Electric rates for households in many American states are below 10 cents per kilowatt hour, while in Britain the rate is 22 cents and in Germany 35 cents. True, Californians and New Yorkers are paying 19 cents, but they and several other states controlled by Democrats are pursuing the European Union’s energy-rationing policies and indeed have promised to keep their share of America’s Paris commitments to reduce emissions.

Keeping electricity rates down is also going to give manufacturers a large energy price advantage over competitors in other countries. Energy-intensive manufacturing is already coming back. The number of jobs in manufacturing is a defective measure because manufacturing output can increase while employment drops due to productivity gains from automation. Nonetheless, it is significant that manufacturing lost over one million jobs in Obama’s eight years, but gained 183,000 in Trump’s first year.

If the Trump deregulatory strategy is successful in reviving manufacturing, then it’s going to benefit many of the states that elected Trump. With high electricity prices that are going higher, companies are not going to be building new factories in California and New York. They are instead going to build in the heartland states that will continue to rely overwhelmingly on low-cost coal and gas for their electricity. China gets it. During his visit last fall, President Trump signed a memorandum of understanding with Chinese companies to invest $83 billion in the state of West Virginia.

When negotiations were concluded in Paris in December 2015, the agreement was hailed as historic, a landmark, and a turning point for the planet. The Guardian headline called it “the world’s greatest diplomatic success”, and the New York Times headline proclaimed it a “Big, Big Deal”. When President Obama ignored the Senate’s constitutional role in ratifying treaties (or not ratifying treaties, as would have been the case with Paris) and officially joined up in September 2016 by merely sending a letter to the United Nations signed by him, he called it “an enduring framework that enables countries to ratchet down their carbon emissions over time, and to set more ambitious targets” (which are required every five years).

Yet when the promoters of the climate industrial complex were trying to convince Trump to stay in Paris, they toned down their rhetoric — way down: it’s really merely a voluntary agreement of little significance. If the US stays in, President Trump can ignore the US’s commitment to reduce emissions or replace it with a much less ambitious one. No one will mind. The important thing is just to stay in the club and pretend that you’re doing something to save the world.

If only we in Australia had a Trump to sort out our energy chaos. Blessed by almost unlimited coal and gas reserves, the leaders of both our major parties have got the global warming religion and, as a result, have sent energy prices through the roof. From only recently having the cheapest electricity in the world, we now have it’s most expensive - our manufacturers now pay four times the amount paid by IS manufacturers. And while coal remains our biggest single export, we are closing down existing coal fired power stations and not replacing them. Successive state governments have banned even the exploration for new gas reserves. And yes, we have already started to have blackouts and manufacturing businesses have already been forced to close operations on days of extreme heat or cold. It’s a mess.

Michael Spencer

June 8th, 201811:06 AM

The REAL solution is to get on with "Generation IV" nuclear power generation; and "The Donald" has already released the shackles on this development in the United States after year of "greentape" during the Obama regime. It seems that the first production line units due to start rolling out this year - from China - surprise! surprise! Quite apart from cheap, clean, and totally safe electricity production (with almost zero waste - indeed, all the present 'waste' is not waste and can be recycled) because of the excess heat that will be available there are a number of side benefits: one of these is to desalinate sea water, virtually for nothing.
Run some pipelines inland; imagine what this could mean for inland rivers in countries like mine, Australia, just for starters! And then there's the availability of a continuous supply of medical isotopes, such as Alpha particle Bismuth 213 - absolutely deadly for the targeted killing of cancers, even diffuse ones such as leukaemia, up until now virtually impossible to get because of the structure of the present Light Water Reactors. And then, to address the nonsense about electric cars and carbon-taxing fuel with higher-than-allowable "carbon emissions": the cheap electricity can be used to extract carbonic acid from water - sea water will do because there's lots of that. Using the high temperatures that will be available this can be cracked to extract the hydrogen and the carbon and these can be strung together to produce what the Americans call GASOLINE!
"Fantasy!" I hear some think. No; it's been done already on a small scale at a US naval base. Take a look at this brief video, just for starters: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=V_0ftKqQ9XE.
And then, there's the surprise that these new reactors will be able to run on a far cheaper and much more common element, using only a little uranium to trigger things off. And this common element is available at the moment as a nuisance-value waste from rare earth mining operations - just by way of example! If anyone would like to learn about this some more, I've sorted information into an order so people can start to wrap their minds around it with "blowing their brains" in the first instance. Download this interactive PDF about the climate http://www.galileomovement.com.au/.../ShouldYouReallyBeAl... and go to page 4 (Although page 3 rather sets the scene), and follow the links in sequence to page 7. Most interestingly, on page 5, you will find videos featuring internationally-renowned environmentalists who have learned of this new technology, and who have changed their minds from being "anti-" to "pro-" nuclear. An instructive lesson for some of out local (Australian)"Green" zealots perhaps?
And a final comment: because this new nuclear technology does not use water either for a coolant or to drive turbines to generate electricity, the units will be much smaller and far more efficient, operate at normal atmospheric pressures (so for example huge containment domes are no longer necessary, etc. thus much cheaper to start with), and Outer Woop Woop* could have its own unit. Minimal land space will be needed - in stark contrast to inefficient wind-farms and solar arrays - and also this will obviate the need for expensive power lines with the resultant "line drop". This technology makes the present enthusiasm for so-called "renewables" and "carbon taxes" nothing more than a sick joke!
* For the education of those not Australian, "Woop Woop" is a mythical out-back town. Get educated here http://www.koalanet.com.au/australian-slang.html#W!

James Rust

June 7th, 201812:06 AM

This charade has gone on long enough. The U.S. is the most blessed nation in the world with vast coal, oil, and natural gas resources, one million square miles of good farmland, and the people with skills and ambition to exploit those assets. With President Trump the U. S. will be the most powerful economic power the world has ever seen. It is foolish to go back to the Democrats attempts to hobble the country by preventing use of our assets.

Roger Graves

June 6th, 20181:06 PM

However it started out, the climate industrial complex is today largely driven by the wind and solar energy business. Since the year 2000, some 3 trillion dollars US has been spent on wind and solar energy, yet even this is dwarfed by estimates in excess of 20 trillion if all energy sources worldwide were to be replaced by wind and solar. Ally yourself to expenditures of this size and you can become rich beyond dreams of avarice, at the expense, of course, of the rest of us who will be paying bloated energy bills.
With this amount of money sloshing around, you can buy yourself no end of politicians, academics, and fading Hollywood stars. Money talks, and this amount of money screams. Don't expect the climate industrial complex to tuck its tail between its legs and slink off without a whimper. If it goes at all it will go kicking and screaming the whole way.

Gordon J. Fulks, PhD (Physics)

June 1st, 201811:06 PM

Excellent analysis Mr Ebell.
I would only take issue with your supposition that global warming "could be right." Covering all bases is not the way that we do science. As Nobel Laureate in Physics Richard Feynman explains here:
http://www.richardfeynman.com/
we guess a new theory, compute the consequences, and compare those computations against the real world. If the comparison fails, the theory fails.
As you mention, the Climate Models run far too hot when compared against robust empirical data. Since the models are the computations that incorporate what proponents of the theory claim it to be, a failure to match observations (by a long ways) dooms the theory.
In science, we do not continue to give any credence to an old theory that has failed, even if doing so creates some sort of tautology that cannot be questioned because it covers all possibilities. We do not continue to talk about static continents instead of Continental Drift. We do not continue to talk about stress causing peptic ulcers instead of a bacterium. Etc. etc.
Science gives us a method to evaluate theories. And we need to use it. Superstitions need to be discarded.
By the way, last month marked the 100th anniversary of Richard Feynman's birth.

Hans Schreuder

May 31st, 20185:05 PM

Once you realise that there is no such phenomenon as a greenhouse effect in our atmosphere and that the so-called greenhouse gases in fact are the biggest coolers of the atmosphere, it is obvious that no amount of emission reductions is going to work. It is physically impossible for atmospheric carbon dioxide to make the world warmer than the sunlight makes it, no matter how many times that heat is recirculated. Does a thermos make the coffee warmer than it was when you put it in? Check http://ilovemycarbondioxide.com/ for all the facts you'll ever need to come to the right conclusion: man-made climate change is indeed a hoax and a huge one at that.

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